Friday, December 3, 2010

painting dump from spring`10 semester

Ah, I've been so bad about maintaining this blog~! :P

I finally bought myself a camera, so I got around to taking pictures of all the stuff I did last semester in my intermediate painting class. So here is a dump with descriptions copypasta'd from deviantart.


First assignment: the goal was to paint a still life made up of "white" objects (though of course there was a lot of variation between ivory and slate and so on!)

Though I don't think the painting itself turned out all that well, I think I got more out of the process and exercise itself.



This was a quick one-class assignment from the intermediate painting class I took spring semester of my freshman year. First we made a "landscape" diorama out of a shoebox and some random colorful stuff (marshmallows, plastic wrap, wrapping paper, etc). Then we... painted it.

Yeah, kind of cheesy I know! But it was fun :D



The assignment was to make a painting about "light." So of course I had to throw creepy naked sexless people in there... =_= and a dog for good measure.



Goal was abstraction.

Ah... not sure what else to say about this besides a vague "it was fun to make!"


man... I miss taking art classes. This semester I had no room for any in between all my engineering blah :( but I'm thinking about taking a sculpture class next semester! That should be fun, I think.

Monday, November 29, 2010

@_@



...finished NaNoWriMo for the first time using my formerly semi-abandoned webcomic parallax that I started back in... sophomore year of high school. 0_0

*promptly collapses*

man, I was just mojo-fried for the ending, so I went ahead and put a troll ending in. But come second-draft time, everything will be revised and maybe I'll put this story... somewhere. Yes. Also thinking of doing some illustrations for it and printing it on lulu for my own amusement. Hm.

for now, though, sleep.

Wednesday, November 10, 2010

functionality at 20%

...my God...

It's 6:30 am and I'm awake not because I woke up early, but because I never fell asleep. There's no hell worse than being exhausted but having nothing happen when you close your eyes. If I try to lie still in the dark there's this horrible feeling of crawling on my skin that is almost nauseating and I have to move around.

I think I'm writing this post just to make sure I can still form words at this point.

What the hell? I'm not even particularly stressed out or anything... gah. Maybe it's time to invest in some OTC meds...

Thursday, September 16, 2010

sketches from China

So at the insistence of dear caro, I'm dusting off the old blogger with my watercolor sketches from China.

copypasta-ing the comments from deviantart.


Sketch of... my mother, sleeping on the plane (and the lady in the next seat over who seemed to keep looking over.)


Most of my stay was in 苏州 (Suzhou), which is very famous for its gardens. 沧浪亭 (Cang Lang Ting, or Great Wave Pavilion
wiki) is one such garden from the Song Dynasty.

I rather liked this garden; it's less known than the others perhaps because of its relatively small size (and so isn't punctuated by loudspeaker-guided tourist groups!) The street outside was busy, but once we entered the walls it was remarkably silent inside. I can imagine how it must have felt to be the official who retired there, refusing to dirty his hands any further with politics...

More 苏州 (Suzhou) gardens! This one is 留园 (Liu Yuan, or Lingering Garden wiki). This garden was pretty cute because it included lots of 评弹 (pingtan, a traditional story-singing form) performers, like this lady playing 琵琶 (pipa, sort of guitar-like instrument) on this wee wooden boat.

The train ride from 苏州 (Suzhou) to 南京 (Nanjing) is a bit more than an hour long, which of course means draw-time!
The train reached a max speed of ~320 km/hr, which made drawing any actual passing-by scenery impossible. So this bit of building and phone cable is more an amalgamation/impression of the view from my window.
I think I drew this while we passed by 无锡(Wuxi) but I'm not sure.

anyway, the clouds in China are really something compared to the 'clouds' in LA (which are more smog blankets, really.)


This is 玄武湖 (Xuan Wu Lake) in 南京 (Nanjing). Ah, I drew this after I lost my digital camera (with 500+ pictures!) in Nanjing, so I was rather grumpy after that. :'(

oh, and my mother decided to show-off and fix my sad little willow tree with her skills in traditional Chinese painting... so this painting is not completely mine, haha.

...this doesn't actually have much to do with China, but I did draw it on this trip. A sort-of self-portrait done from the reflection of the train window on the way back from Nanjing to Suzhou. As self-portraits go, this isn't very accurate (I look more like the painting in my deviantID, haha) but heck, it was fun to make.
I noticed I have an odd tendency to lengthen faces around the nose area when making this kind of quick pencil-less sketch...


This is actually my favorite sketch I did from this trip. This is 同理 (Tongli wiki), a little touristy town right on the outskirts of Suzhou. This sketch was done from the window of a coffee shop, so I was a lot more patient to draw from my air-conditioned vantage point!


This isn't a sketch of any particular place, actually, but just a sort of general impression of the picturesque little bridges and canals of Suzhou, which is why it is known as 水乡(shui xiang, or water ...township, kind of a weird translation...)
The willow trees blowing in the light breeze, carp swimming under lily and lotus pads next to hundreds-of-years-old bridges... it's quite nice.


anyway, that concludes this travel series!

...I realize now that the scan is somewhat lopsided. Damn! I already packed this sketchbook into my suitcase... perhaps I'll rescan when I'm not feeling so lazy.


anyways, going to China with the parents made me realize that they actually grew up in a similar children-of-immigrants background as mine... being Taiwanese-born from mainland parents, being the 外省人 outsiders, then coming to America and being foreigners. Returning to Taiwan after 30 years, everything changes and is foreign. And going back to China to where their parents are from, but not belonging even when they feel they should. In a way I feel better off, as at least I was born here and do consider myself American, whereas they consider themselves neither Taiwanese nor Chinese nor American... perpetual outsiders without a homeland.

Perhaps they are simply Cerritos citizens.

Wednesday, July 28, 2010

Some thoughts on painting...

If I can even call myself either (which is pretty pretentious already), I prefer think of myself as a painter rather than a drawer.

On lunch break at work (which is pretty much one giant lunch break, lolinternship), time for me to wax poetic.

What I like about painting:

Traditionally
-The smell of acrylic paint fresh out of the tube
-The little furrows left from a square brushhead in wet paint (goddammit I love square brushheads so freaking much, with nice stiff bristles)
-Getting so wrapped up into defining the shape of a patch or polygon of color that I completely forget what purpose it is supposed to serve, only that I want it to be pointed so and angular here
-Mixing colors on the canvas: blending two slightly wet edges, blending an unlikely blue into a warm, or vice versa
-Running my fingers over the curious smooth surface of dried acrylic
-Pushing patches of color to the edges; the little ridge that forms makes it feel like you're actually crafting a shape out of nothing but canvas and paint, making empty air and material on a flat canvas
-Taking the palette knife and smoosing on a nice flat plane of unbroken paint, so delicious and butter-smooth when it's wet, the delightful crinkle at the edge of this mark
-The texture! Painting at school, not worrying about waste, just layering it on thick and creamy 'till it looks like a spider web or stucco or a cupcake frosting
-The intermediate stage between the initial mark on blank canvas and the final refining stages: blocking out areas onto the rough sketch, not being afraid to mess up because hell, acrylic dries fast and I can cover it no problem
-The odd satisfaction of having little flecks of color all over my hands and nails

Digitally
-Paint Tool Sai: complete infatuation. Can't live without the amazing blending power of just the brush tool. Blend blend blend, blend blue into yellow and orange and red, put some grey in that warm and what the heck, even though it's grey it looks like blue.
-Zooming in: it's even easier to get into that weird shape-oriented state, where this patch of color is somehow meaningful despite being just a bit of shoulder or leg or something.
-Undo! An obvious one.
-Flipping: great for quality control. Happily, I've noticed over time that my drawings/paintings look less deformed when flipped now.
-Layers: some mixed feelings here; it's easy to get so wrapped up in each individual piece and forget the whole, but then again, the convenience!


Things I don't like about painting:

Traditionally
-Cleanup. The big one.
-Mixing paints. One of the problems I have is getting too lazy with this and reusing the same five colors until it all becomes a soupy grey mess.
-When the paint just won't listen to you and stubbornly refuses to get into that shape or texture
-When the white paint is contaminated and becomes that weird yellow-green-grey
-Transportation/storage. T______T I do love working large, but it is such a pain...
-The last stage of detail refinement: I love love love the middle refinement, but gosh I hate the tiny part.
-When the picture in your head doesn't match...

Digitally
-I need a better way to angle my CINTIQ so I don't break my neck.
-I don't bother too much with textures and filters, but I really should. It hangs over my head.
-No matter how amazing Sai is, it still just can't replicate the physical feeling of brush putting paint on canvas. An unfair observation.



TL;DR - Painting is fun and I need to do more of it before summer is over.

Monday, July 26, 2010

Sketches from my trip down to the San Dieguito Wetlands.

What, non-fanart from me?!

Anyway, last Friday I took a trip with the other interns down to the San Dieguito Wetlands restoration project down in Del Mar/San Diego.

Cool stuff man! I am glad I brought my trusty DS + Colors along for the ride.




Top is a view of the large saltwater basin.
2nd down is the (rich!) houses of Del Mar, stupidly built on sandspit...
3rd down is a view of the Wheeler North restoration kelp reef (haha, it is that darkish blob on the water).
Last is some random bit of SoCal industrial park that I passed riding the MetroLink.

(I have to say, these looked better on the teensy DS screen, but ah well. It's the speed-paint practice that counts.)

Anyway, 'twas an enlightening day for me. Helped me remember why I wanted to be an environmental engineer and all that jazz, something I lost sight of this past year through all my numerous early life crises and school-stress.

I really love the natural landscapes of Southern California. Yeah, it's dry and dessicated and brown, but powerfully so. I like stark things like rock and coast and grass sun-dried to gold. :)

Thursday, July 22, 2010

Splurging, Spending, Squeeing

So usually I'm pretty frugal... until it comes to art supplies/stationary. :( (I have a really unholy fetish for such things. Stick me in an art supply store, hell, even an Office Max! and I can wander around for hours on end.)

I finally cracked and bought an R4DS for my Nintendo DS just so I could paint on DS Colors!"

First painting, and it's a Dragon Age fanart. Figures!



Also, with Colors you can make videos of the drawing process... it's really quite cool.

And so I uploaded my first YouTube video ever...



Then I discovered this website and splurged $60 on sexy sexy sexy waterbrushes, watercolors, dip pens, waterproof ink... oh guilt! I had better actually use all this stuff instead of just packratting like I usually do...